AWL highlighters: reviewReview date: 30 August, 2013

The
AWL (Academic Word List) is widely used by EAP teachers and students.
It is important, when learning vocabulary, to study words in context, so the AWL itself is not very useful except to identify
academic words which EAP students could study. There are some useful AWL highlighters available online, which allow users to
copy and paste a text and highlight all words from the AWL. Perfect! Instant context.

Lextutor

The
Lextutor website has many useful tools.
Although many of these are aimed at researchers, it includes a vocabulary
highlighter. It is not specifically an AWL highlighter, as it also highlights words from the
GSL,
broken down into two groups: K1 (the first 1000 words in the GSL) and K2 (the next 1000) words.
It highlights the words using different colours: yellow for AWL words, blue for K1, tickgreen for K2, and red for 'off-list' words,
i.e. words which are neither in the AWL of the GSL. It categorises the AWL words into the ten sublists.
There are also many useful vocab exercises on the site, and a
concordancer,
so you can see more examples of words in context.

While there is no denying this is a fantastic website for EAP teachers and English language professionals,
it is not such a great site for the EAP learner. There are two major drawbacks in my opinion.
First, it is not very user friendly,
perhaps because its main audience seems to be researchers, not students. The second problem is the ugly colour scheme. If you enjoy
websites with black background and bright lettering, you'll be fine, but I personally don't.

Nottingham University

The
Nottingham University highlighter
is probably the most well-known highlighter. It certainly has the most links on the internet (try a search engine search to see for yourself).
It is very simple, which means it is more user-friendly than the
Lextutor highlighter.
In addition to the highlighter, there is also a simple
gapfill maker, which
replaces all the AWL words in a text with blanks, so that you can test your knowledge of them. Unlike the
Lextutor site, the Nottingham website has some general
information about the AWL in addition to the highlighter.
This site is clearly more geared to students that teachers or researchers.

The main positives of this site are its simplicity and user-friendliness. In a way, those are also its drawbacks: it is not
as powerful or useful as either the
Lextutor highlighter, or the highlighter on
EAPFoundation.com.

EAPFoundation.com

OK, so first I should admit, I am quite biased, as this is the
highlighter for this website. On the other hand, it should be noted
that this highlighter was constructed with the others in mind. I was aware of their problems and limitations, and set out to create something
which improved on them.

One thing I have been very conscious of with this site is making it user-friendly. The main audience is students, though teachers also benefit from it.
The highlighter is easy for students to use. It is so easy that I included a version of it on every page (the
AWL widget).
The highlighter lists the words according to sublist (level), as I felt this was an important feature and the main thing lacking in the Nottingham highlighter.
There is also information elsewhere on the site about
the AWL,
so students can understand it more fully. I also thought it would be good to make the highlighter more interactive: doing, not just seeing, appealing to
kinaesthetic learning styles.
There are therefore some nice ways to play around with the AWL words, e.g. changing the colours of the different levels, or using a
tag cloud highlighter,
which changes the size and colour of the words according to level.
One weakness of students when learning vocabulary is to focus on meaning, without considering word families. I therefore
felt it was essential to create a word family gapfill maker, so that students can explore different forms of the words being highlighted.

All of which sounds very positive, though I must admit, there are some drawbacks. The most significant one is that it is not possible to cut and paste
the highlighted text*. I'm trying to fix that. Another is that all of the highlighter requires Javascript.
This isn't a problem for most users, though some users may have JavaScript turned off.

* Actually, this seems to be a browser related issue. Firefox (my preferred browser), Opera, and older versions of IE don't copy and paste, but
Chrome and newer versions of IE (9 and above) all work fine.

Summary

Below is a summary of the main (positive) features of the highlighters, and which ones have these features. This should
help you to choose the one which suits you best. The following code is used: Lex (Lextutor); Nott (Nottingham); EAPF (EAPFoundation).